Set Up Session Replay

Learn how to enable the Beta of Mobile Session Replay in your app.

Mobile support for Session Replay is in Beta. Features available in Beta are still work-in-progress and may have bugs. We recognize the irony.

If you have any questions, feedback or would like to report a bug, please open a GitHub issue with a link to a relevant replay in Sentry if possible.

Session Replay helps you get to the root cause of an error or latency issue faster by providing you with a reproduction of what was happening in the user's device before, during, and after the issue. You can rewind and replay your application's state and see key user interactions, like taps, swipes, network requests, and console entries, in a single UI.

By default, our Session Replay SDK masks all text content, images, and user input, giving you heightened confidence that no sensitive data will leave the device. To learn more, see product docs.

Make sure your Sentry React Native SDK version is at least 5.26.0.

If you already have the SDK installed, you can update it to the latest version with:

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npm install @sentry/react-native --save

To set up the integration, add the following to your Sentry initialization.

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import * as Sentry from "@sentry/react-native";

Sentry.init({
  dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
  _experiments: {
    replaysSessionSampleRate: 1.0,
    replaysOnErrorSampleRate: 1.0,
  },
  integrations: [Sentry.mobileReplayIntegration()],
});

While you're testing, we recommend that you set replaysSessionSampleRate to 1.0. This ensures that every user session will be sent to Sentry.

Once testing is complete, we recommend lowering this value in production. We still recommend keeping replaysOnErrorSampleRate set to 1.0.

Sampling allows you to control how much of your website's traffic will result in a Session Replay. There are two sample rates you can adjust to get the replays relevant to you:

  1. replaysSessionSampleRate - The sample rate for replays that begin recording immediately and last the entirety of the user's session.
  2. replaysOnErrorSampleRate - The sample rate for replays that are recorded when an error happens. This type of replay will record up to a minute of events prior to the error and continue recording until the session ends.

Sampling begins as soon as a session starts. replaysSessionSampleRate is evaluated first. If it's sampled, the replay recording will begin. Otherwise, replaysOnErrorSampleRate is evaluated and if it's sampled, the integration will begin buffering the replay and will only upload it to Sentry if an error occurs. The remainder of the replay will behave similarly to a whole-session replay.

The SDK is recording and aggressively masking all text, images, and webviews by default. If your app has any sensitive data, you should only turn the default masking off after explicitly masking out any sensitive data, using the APIs described below. However, if you're working on a mobile app that doesn't contain any PII or private data, you can opt out of the default text and image-masking settings. To learn more about Session Replay privacy, read our docs.

If you encounter any data not being redacted with the default settings, please let us know through a GitHub issue.

To disable redaction altogether (not to be used on applications with sensitive data):

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Sentry.mobileReplayIntegration({
  maskAllText: false,
  maskAllImages: false,
  maskAllVectors: false,
}),

Sentry helps you capture your React components and unlock additional insights in your application. You can set it up to use React component names.

So instead of looking at this:

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View > Touchable > View > Text

You can also see exactly which React component was used, like:

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MyCard (View, MyCard.ts) > MyButton (Touchable, MyCard.ts) > View > Text

To add React Component Names use annotateReactComponents in metro.config.js.

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const { getDefaultConfig } = require("@react-native/metro-config");
const { withSentryConfig } = require("@sentry/react-native/metro");
module.exports = withSentryConfig(getDefaultConfig(__dirname), {
  annotateReactComponents: true,
});

Errors that happen while a replay is running will be linked to the replay, making it possible to jump between related issues and replays. However, it's possible that in some cases the error count reported on the Replays Details page won't match the actual errors that have been captured. That's because errors can be lost, and while this is uncommon, there are a few reasons why it could happen:

  • The replay was rate-limited and couldn't be accepted.
  • The replay was deleted by a member of your org.
  • There were network errors and the replay wasn't saved.
Help improve this content
Our documentation is open source and available on GitHub. Your contributions are welcome, whether fixing a typo (drat!) or suggesting an update ("yeah, this would be better").